Labeled the goat after his fourth-quarter turnover enabled
Portland to force overtime in Game 4 and subsequently take a
commanding 3-1 series lead, Lin rebounded to score 21 points off the
bench and helped carry the Rockets to a 108-98 win over the Trail
Blazers on Wednesday night at Toyota Center in Game 5 of a Western
Conference quarterfinal series.
With All-Star guard James Harden largely invisible until a late
scoring surge pushed Houston over the top, Lin filled the offensive
void, tallying 15 points during the middle two quarters to keep
Houston afloat. The Rockets improved to 3-1 in elimination games the
last two postseasons.
"Game 4 was definitely a rough one. I didn't sleep much that night,"
Lin said. "Over the last two days I just kept reminding myself to
stay faithful and trust in God's perfect plan. It doesn't always go
your way.
"Tonight my mindset was to go out there and play for Him, play as
hard as I can. Same mindset as Game 4, but tonight was a better
outcome."
Game 6 is Friday night at the Moda Center in Portland.
Harden had just nine points prior to converting a baseline reverse
layup with 3:58 to play that pushed the Rockets' lead to 100-96. He
followed with his lone 3-pointer in seven attempts and two free
throws with 1:29 left to help the Rockets stave off elimination.
Harden finished with 17 points and seven assists but continued his
woeful series shooting by missing 10 of 15 shots.
Twin towers Dwight Howard (22 points, 14 rebounds) and Omer Asik (10
points, 15 rebounds) added double-doubles while Chandler Parsons
chipped in 20 points as Houston won the fourth quarter for the first
time this series.
"We've learned the hard way this series," Parsons said. "We've had
multiple leads that we've given up, and they're a tough team and
they're not going to ever throw in the towel. They're going to keep
coming at you, and they've got guys that can hit tough shots.
"The biggest thing for us tonight was just to learn from our
mistakes."
Portland forward LaMarcus Aldridge scored just eight points on
3-for-12 shooting after totaling 89 points over Games 1 and 2. The
Trail Blazers' starting backcourt of Damian Lillard and Wesley
Matthews combined for 53 points on 18-for-36 shooting, 8-for-17 from
deep.
The Trail Blazers trailed by as many as 17 points before Lillard cut
the deficit to two points with two free throws at the 5:08 mark of
the fourth quarter. That's when Harden responded with his sudden
scoring burst.
"They made plays," Matthews said. "Give them credit. They played
with a sense of urgency and desperation that we knew they would. It
seemed like Jeremy Lin hit big shot after big shot."
[to top of second column] |
The Rockets
made a run that provided the sort of cushion that could calm their
collective elimination nerves, bridging the first and second
quarters with a 15-0 spurt that turned a 27-26 deficit into a 41-27
lead.
D-League call-up Troy Daniels scored the final five points of that
burst, sending the crowd into a tizzy along with a Portland timeout.
But the Trail Blazers rallied as they have all series, whittling a
51-34 deficit at the 5:39 mark of the second quarter to eight points
at intermission on Lillard's 3-pointer with 33.6 seconds left.
For once, the Rockets responded when the Trail Blazers rallied,
finding a little something extra to add to a series that has been
rife with tension.
"I think both teams have been playing with high intensity all
series," Portland coach Terry Stotts said. "I didn't notice it one
way or another because all the games have been at a high level of
intensity and effort.
"I think you'll see the same thing on Friday."
NOTES: For all of the talk about how evenly matched the Trail
Blazers and Rockets have been this series, Portland had dominated
the fourth quarter, winning the final period in regulation of each
game until Wednesday. Portland is plus-10 in the fourth quarter
overall. "We've been a good fourth-quarter team for a good part of
the season," Portland coach Terry Stotts said before the Rockets
outscored his team 26-21 in the fourth on Wednesday. "We have
confidence at the end of the games. I think we have a lot of trust
in each other in the fourth quarter. We get stops when we need them,
and I think that bodes well for us because being good in the fourth
quarter, being good in close games, a lot of times that's when games
are won and lost." ... Houston was reputed to be the superior
defensive team, but the Rockets had allowed Portland to shoot a
robust 52.6 percent (130-for-247) on two-point field goals in the
first four games. "At a certain point they're very hard to guard and
they're very hard to defend if there are blow-bys and straight line
drives," Rockets coach Kevin McHale said.
[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|